More and more people on Earth, see the mysterious phenomena in the sky, as well as unidentified flying objects. Governments of all countries withhold information from its citizens and put pressure on witnesses and the media. This resource was created to promote the free flow of information on UFOs and paranormal phenomena, bypassing the ban and censorship of the government. People need to know the truth!

The CELESTIAL Convergence is pleased to present the archaeological research and findings of author Brien Foerster.

Brien was born in the US, but moved to the west coast of Canada as a child, where he became immediately fascinated by the Native traditions of people such as the Haida. He learned to carve totem poles, canoes, masks and other ceremonial things from master Native carvers, and became a professional sculptor at age 26, basically dropping his career as a marine biologist. In 1995 he moved to Maui, Hawaii, and was hired as assistant project manager for the building of the 62 foot double hull sailing canoe ( ancestor of the modern day catamaran ) Mo'okiha O Pi'ilani (Sacred Lizard That Pierces The Heavens.) This project lasted 2 years.

There, having learned how to make Hawaiian outrigger canoe paddles from master carver Keola Sequiera, he started an online outrigger paddle business, which flourished internationally. Peru became his next major area of interest. The study of the Inca culture led to his writing a book, A Brief History Of The Incas which is available on this site, as well as 7 others which are e-books, available through Amazon.com and also his Hidden Inca Tours website. Other projects, which will result in published books, include one about the ancient history of Hawaii, the mysterious stone monuments of Peru that predate the Inca, and the search for the lost continent of Mu. This will require combining all that he has learned so far, with trips to New Zealand (Aotearoa), Hawaii, and Easter island (Rapanui.) He is now the part time assistant director of the Paracas History Museum, curating and giving archaeological tours of the area, with special emphasis on the Elongated Skull Paracas culture.

On the eveof a newattempt tolaunchthe Large Hadron Collider(LHC),serious scholarshave begunto expressan assumptionthat oftenariseat theCERN (European Organization for NuclearResearch)problemsand issues -this "something more thancoincidence."hey believe that the noise has a very collider not to give scientists discover "incompatible with the nature of the" Higgs boson, dark matter and new dimensions, and therefore every effort CERN in this direction is doomed to failure.Whatever may seem absurd that version, it launched - and reinforced the mathematical calculations - two eminent physicist: Holger Bech Nielsen of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, and Masao Ninomiya of the Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics in Kyoto. Now, wishing to refute the assumption would have to work on the scientific substantiation of its position.However, among those who accepted the hypothesis of Nielsen with a certain degree of seriousness, there are at least a Senior Fellow at CERN - Brian Cox of Manchester University. In that case, "if the time travelers will break into the central LHC hardware and pulled the cord," he sent the British newspaper readers, "the article in support of the Nielsen theory, which I wrote in 2025."Official tasks LHC look no less fantastic than that proposed by Nielsen theory. In particular, physicists hope to use this device to confirm the so-called string theory, under which were formed by the collision of protons tiny black holes will allow researchers to penetrate into new dimensions that differ from the known four.The LHC is a source of inspiration for writers such as Dan Brown, and ordinary fans of conspiracy theories.The most common "horror story" says that from the depths of the accelerator may see a black hole that can swallow up the planet, and the novel by Douglas Preston "Blasphemy" ("Blasphemy") mad scientist tries to use a similar device to contact with God.Recall, the European Organization for Nuclear Research reported that experiments on collisions of particles in the Large Hadron Collider will resume in November. Collider will be turned on at half strength.